Gauteng Smallholder May 2016 | Page 22

PROPERTY Is your plot a developer’s dream? I f you've lived on a smallholding for any length of time you'll have noticed property development inexorably taking place around you, swallowing up plot and farm land and converting it into residential What developers look for when buying up plots (and what you can do to make your plot more attractive to them) developments and commercial spaces. It's an inevitable part of plot life, with the band of land CO2 EMISSION From page 18 while green or soon after flowering it is termed a green manure. Cover crops improve carbon sequestration by enhancing soil structure, and adding organic matter to the soil. K Crop rotation means planting different crops on the same area of land, one after the other. Varying the type of crops grown can increase the level of soil organic matter. However, effectiveness of crop rotating depends on the type of crops and crop rotation times. Grazing practices also make a big difference. Overgrazing reduces carbon sequestration and productivity, but stock owners can avoid it with a rotational grazing system that incorporates multiple paddocks. Stocking density and rotation time depend on the season, the weather and the health of the soil. A rough guideline is to move animals to a new paddock after they've consumed about half of the biomass, and then rest each paddock until new immediately outside a town's suburbs, which are very often smallholdings of various sizes and descriptions, being the growth is evident. Overgrazing is probably the biggest single agricultural problem facing Gauteng's smallholder, particularly those who keep horses, as most smallholdings with livestock on them are greatly overstocked. Nevertheless, following these guidelines to foster healthy pastures will store more carbon in the soil, thereby helping to ease global warming. 20 www.sasmallholder.co.za next-available land for development in any growing town or city. So, what is it that a developer looks for when seeking out land to buy and build on? According to a leading East Rand developer there are many factors weighing on the equation but in a nutshell it's all about “location, location, location.” A history of any Gauteng town reveals over time how development, and densification, takes place. When Benoni was founded, for example, the first properties proclaimed along what is now one of the main streets, Prince's Avenue, were five acres (or just more than 2 20 000m ) in extent. Gradually, over the decades, they were carved up into smaller and smaller units, until the current common Continued on page 22